[368] Jer. xxvi. 18; Tal. Bab., Makkoth, 24 b.

[369] The list of bishops from Eusebius (“Hist. Eccl.,” iv. 5) is given by Canon Williams (“Holy City,” 1849, i. p. 487).

[370] “Excav. at Jer.,” p. 265. Another text by Sabinus, an officer of the 10th (Fretensis) legion, was supposed by M. Clermont-Ganneau (Pal. Expl. Fund Quarterly, 1871, p. 103) to be as late as the time of Caracalla, which now seems doubtful, as the 3rd legion had replaced the 10th in 117 A. D.

[371] See Tal. Bab., Ketuboth, 111 a; Joel iii. 2, 12.

[372] See back, [pp. 128], [164]. Clermont-Ganneau, in Revue Archéologique, May-June, 1883; “Mem. West Pal. Survey,” Jerusalem vol., p. 404; Pal. Expl. Fund Quarterly, Jan. 1900, p. 75, report by Mr. C. A. Hornstein; Oct. 1908, p. 342, report by Mr. R. A. Stewart Macalister.

[373] Clermont-Ganneau, in Pal. Expl. Fund Quarterly, 1871, p. 102; de Vogüé, “Temple de Jérusalem,” pl. xxxviii. fig. 2.

[374] Canon Dalton, in Pal. Expl. Fund Quarterly, April 1896, p. 133; Bliss, “Excav. at Jer.,” pp. 249–53.

[375] Tacitus, “Hist.,” iv. 83; see Gibbon, ch. xxviii.

[376] Akkadian sar, “king,” and ap, “sea”; Turkish ab. Api is also “water” in ancient Persian—Sanskrit ap, modern Persian ab.

[377] “Epist. ad Dardanum.”